Hospital unveils procedure for enhanced surgical precision and patient care

Sep 15, 2023 - 15:58
 0
Hospital unveils procedure for enhanced surgical precision and patient care
Kisumu CECM for Medical Services, Public Health, and Sanitation, Dr. Gregory Ganda receives a donation of laparoscopy equipment worth Sh.4.4 million from the OTPAK project manager Dr. Peter Gakuru at JOOTRH on Thursday.

Kisumu,

Friday, September 15, 2023,

KNA by Robert Ojwang’ 

Jaramogi Oginga Odinga Teaching and Referral Hospital (JOOTRH) in Kisumu County has, in an effort to revolutionize healthcare and offer better services to surgical patients, unveiled laparoscopic surgery in the facility after obtaining a gasless laparoscopy equipment worth Sh.4.4 million.

This new technique provides multiple clinical advantages including low cost, less pain and bleeding after the operation, a shorter hospital stay, faster recovery time, and reduced scarring.

 Laparoscopy prevents large incisions in the patient’s skin since the surgeon uses a device called a laparoscope. The gadget has a light source and a camera that relays images of the inside of the abdomen or pelvis on a screen.   

The new development at JOOTRH has been supported by the Operating Theatre Practitioners Association of Kenya (OTPAK) who are working to bolster surgical care in the country.

The organization donated a laparoscopy tower and instruments that can help with basic general surgery, obstetrics and gynecology procedures, and various other surgical disciplines.

Dr. Peter Gakuru, OTPAK project manager speaking during the handing over ceremony of the state-of-the-art instrument at JOOTRH on Thursday, underscored the need for institutional partnerships to sustain the gains attained so far.

He committed that OTPAK will support JOOTRH with consumables even as procedures are done, noting that about four centers have ceased laparoscopy due to lack of consumables.

“JOOTRH is the 12th public facility in Kenya to have laparoscopic equipment, with this, surgery can be done under local anesthesia, we commit to training nurses, surgeons, biomedical staff, and anesthetists so that patients get to benefit,” Dr. Gakuru noted.

The team has so far installed the equipment in 12 public hospitals in Kenya’s rural with about 70 laparoscopic procedures including pediatric and forensic surgeries already done.

Kisumu County Executive Committee Member (CECM) for Medical Services, Public Health, and Sanitation, Dr. Gregory Ganda acknowledged OTPAK for the donation that seeks to transform surgical services in the region.

Dr. Ganda assured that a consistent dedicated surgical team would provide quality management and care of the infrastructure. He noted that despite Kisumu trailblazing in primary care, it still needed more investments in other areas.

According to Dr Patrick Marwa, a general surgeon and laparoscopic and surgical oncologist at JOOTRH, the availability of the technology at the referral facility will impact the training of surgeons as they will be equipped with the necessary skills to handle patients while using cutting-edge technology.  

“Laparoscopy has been a reserve of the rich as the cost was prohibitive and was only available in high-end hospitals, now the less fortunate can afford it at a low cost,” Dr Marwa added.  

Private hospitals charge between Sh.300,000 to Sh.350,000 to secure laparoscopic services, however, at JOOTRH patients are set to get the same services by just paying the theater fee of about Sh.7,000.

The noble initiative by OTPAK envisions establishing a sustainable system for gasless laparoscopic surgery and a self-sustaining laparoscopic surgery program by offering public hospitals a kick-start to enable the facilities to maneuver the initial stages of implementation devoid of difficulties. 

Courtesy; KNA

 

What's Your Reaction?

like

dislike

love

funny

angry

sad

wow